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It's not just about the neighbourhood of Geylang in the city-state of Singapore. The book "No Money No Honey" is about sex biz in general and it's impact on the people. Author David Brazil is an Irish traveller who came to Singapore in 1998. By then he has contributed articles and pictures to most major Singapore newspapers and magazines on a wide range of topics, including travel, fashion, sex, football, and last not least: nightlife. He has edited various publications and was involved with FHM Singapore and ETC magazines. He played a leading role in the award-winning Mee Pok Man movie, and is an occasional TCS-TV comedy actor, male model and tourism lecturer.

The Book Araki Gold is very well produced and carefully designed - a gallery tour in print of the world of Araki. Definitely not for everyone, but everyone who collects or shoots premium photography should be aware of it. Tracing Nobuyoshi Araki’s career, this volume comprises a collection of emblematic photographs - one shot per day. It's an outstanding series of nudes, very elegant female portraits and a number of stories set in traditional Japan. Alongside these serial works are portraits and street photographs taken in the 60s and 70s. With his extraordinary works Araki records Japanese society during its period of intense economic growth. His new flower compositions and the classic bondage series are also included, which are responsible for making him famous throughout the world. His recent productions will be given broad exposure in the Tokyo Diary 2003–2007 series.

Misty Keasler's Book Love Hotels is a find! It shows - unlike the dank motels for anonymous sex in the U.S. - that Japanese love hotels are much more playful and unapologetically sexual. Keasler has chosen photos that express the humor, desire, and the loneliness of Love Hotel rooms.

The author studied photography at Columbia College. She graduated in spring of 2001. Misty Keasler contributes to Harpers, New York Times, London Daily Telegraph, Time, Dwell, Esquire, and Newsweek a.o. In 2003 she was awarded the Lange-Taylor Prize, included in PDN’s 30 Emerging Photographers. Love Hotels was her first monograph, followed by a show of the same title at the Museum of Contemporary Photography at Columbia College at the beginning of 2007. Her work is included in the permanent collections of the Museum of Fine Art, Houston, The Kiyosato Museum of Photographic Art, Japan, and the Dallas Museum of Art.

... She loves the sound of her chosen name, she says, and didn’t know until much later that it means “illusion.” But it’s so very ﬁ tting, of course, since that’s exactly her job description. Maya laughs. She’s proud to be a high priestess of illusion and even came up with a running joke in honor of her name: By day, she works in public relations but by night she works in, misspelling intended, pubic relations. On one occasion, however, the joke was literally on her instead. “One guy wanted me to shave in front of him, to shave my pubic hair,” she recalls, “and yes, I did it. Some guys like girls shaved and others don’t like that, so I don’t know, it’s hard to accommodate everyone. Some like me bare, some like me with a lot of hair. “Some hair down there looks more natural, doesn’t it? I think so. Anyway, this guy wanted me bare and paid me an extra S$50. It was my ﬁ rst time actually doing that. I should have asked him for more!” Pubic relations, what kind of work was that for a sweet girl like her? Well, she could quit her day job if she wanted to, from the rave reviews she’s received from her customers, not to mention the somewhat disproportionate income gap that results from such adoration. Hot damn, surely she must must be good! Why else would be good! Why else would so many of these guys keep calling to book her again ...

Singapore is an Asian economic miracle, still a strategic crossroads, but thanks to the constant influx of business travelers the city state's position on the map has also garnered bluechip status in the international sex industry. Beautiful escorts from all over the world offer discreet companionship for a reasonable price.

Gerrie Lim investigated this phenomenon and gained access to the secret world of highpriced sex workers. The subjects in his book Invisible Trade are women who are lavishly rewarded with money or gifts, some diverging from the oft-trod path to perform kinky services that include whipping and spanking, others being flown to exotic resorts in the company of men with money to burn. It's quite a fascinating book of cultural observation, from the vantage point of an eloquent literary voice. The author also published In Lust We Trust - Adventures in Adult Cinema, his memoir of a decade spent covering the erotica industry in Los Angeles, where he previously lived for 15 years as a writer contributing to Billboard, Penthouse, Playboy and The Wall Street Journal.

Steven Yang's book Butterfly explores love for sale in Southeast Asia. It uncovers the sensuality of 26 young Asian ladies - profiled in an erotic odyssey. The reader learns a lot about Asian sexual techniques, travel, culture, history, politics, and Pattaya's wild celebration of Songkran. The intrepid photojournalist is writing travel guides in Pattaya and Phnom Penh, making love with pretty Thai and Vietnamese women every night. His book contains nice shooting illustrations too. Butterfly is hot, relentless and explicit - a virtual Kama Sutra of sexual variations, delivered in a man-to-man fashion. Steven Yang is author of ten guides to Southeast Asian destinations. He has woven a treasure of travel information into this erotic tour de force. Meant for single travelling men this work provides very good info and a good approach to sport fucking. It gives prices, what to look for, and where to look.

With his book Asian Mystique Sheridan Prasso addresses a non-Asian audience. She asserts that Americans and Europeans view Asians living in both the West and Asia as exotic, relying on mostly unflattering stereotypes. Non-Asian readers perceive Asian women as dragon ladies, docile wives, vixens, or prostitutes and Asian men as either devious or undersexed and weak. These stereotypes, she explains, arise from longtime imperial adventures in Asia and are maintained and fostered by the representation of Asians in the media. In an attempt to correct these misconceptions, Prasso surveys a variety of topics that seem somewhat idiosyncratically organized: social and marital relationships between Westerners and Asians and among Asians, the truth of the geisha, the experience of a Vietnamese woman who had a child with a U.S. soldier, flight attendants on Cathy Pacific Airlines, Asian sex workers, and Asian women in politics.

Read either this book Bangkok Babylon or Thailand Confidential - both by Jerry Hopkins. It's not necessary to have them both because of many similar chapters. In the colorful tradition of Orwell and Hemingway, Jerry Hopkins recalls his first decade as an expatriate by profiling 25 of Bangkok's most unforgettable characters. Among them: a Catholic priest who has lived and worked in the Bangkok slums for 35 years, Vietnam war helicopter pilots who opened a go-go bar, a documentary filmmaker who lives with elephants, a CIA operative worshipped by the local villagers for his ability to supply food, weapons, clothing … … stranger than fiction. In this book you'll read of things that will drop your jaw while discovering what it takes to be one of Thailand's many expats.

There’s nothing at all “confidential” in this book, and certainly the cover art is misleading. Like most grumpy old men, author Jerry Hopkins is just an old softie. His barbs are deliberately dulled, and the screed that he’d perhaps love to unleash is muffled in a silk pillow. In his words the book Thailand Confidential is a “love letter to a peculiar place”. But love doesn’t get a deeper look in when Hopkins is complaining about commercial scams and tourist rip-offs, the war on drugs and nightclub pee-checks. He touches unhelpfully on the drowned princess and Chalerm Yoobamrung’s naughty sons and issues a primer on local superstition (“We in the West fear viruses; Thais fear ghosts”) before managing to get a little deeper into things, with a look at phallic worship in a bar.
The velvet-glove approach dallies with elephants and water buffalo, bargirls and mia noy.

Some of his essays were first published in magazines like Metro and Thai Airways’ Sawasdee. They sound like the soothing family reading you get on a plane. Both faeces and a vagina are referred to as “you know what”. He toys amateurishly with topics like Tinglish and krieng jai, making the mistake in the latter piece of quoting Mont Redmond, whose keener observation is like a crystal in the murk of Hopkins’ discombobulation.

Flights to South East Asia. Click on "Read more: Flights" to get current prices for flights to Angeles City, Bali, Bangkok, Phuket and Pattaya. MeetJasmin gives you the latest updates on flights from Los Angeles, London, New York, Paris, Perth, Seoul and Melbourne.

From L.A. to Manila, From Paris to Bali, From London to Bangkok, From Sydney to Singapore

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